ARE ARTIFICIAL BIRD NESTS EFFECTIVE SURROGATES FOR ESTIMATING PREDATION ON REAL BIRD NESTS? A TEST WITH TROPICAL BIRDS

Artificial bird nests are often used in studying birds whose nests are difficult to find, such as those of many tropical species. Yet the underlying assumption that predation on artificial nests accurately estimates predation on real nests may be invalid. We compared rates at which contents of real...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Auk 2005-07, Vol.122 (3), p.843-852
Hauptverfasser: Robinson, W. Douglas, Styrsky, Jennifer Nesbitt, Brawn, Jeffrey D
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container_title The Auk
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Styrsky, Jennifer Nesbitt
Brawn, Jeffrey D
description Artificial bird nests are often used in studying birds whose nests are difficult to find, such as those of many tropical species. Yet the underlying assumption that predation on artificial nests accurately estimates predation on real nests may be invalid. We compared rates at which contents of real and artificial nests were lost to predators in a Panamanian rainforest. We attempted to make artificial nests as realistic as possible by moving real, undamaged nests to species-typical nest sites in a study area where the same species were actively breeding. Characteristics of new sites for the moved nests were statistically similar to nest sites chosen by birds. We baited nests with two quail eggs and monitored them for species-specific incubation periods. Predation on real and artificial nests was dissimilar in three of four species, revealing that predation on artificial nests correlated poorly with predation on real nests. In a fourth species, artificial and real nests were lost at similar rates. The latter result may have occurred by chance, because depredated real nests rarely showed any sign of damage; whereas depredated artificial nests were torn, which suggests that real and artificial nests attracted different predators. Our results indicate that artificial nests, even when built by the species themselves and placed in realistic situations, are poor predictors of real nest success and we caution against their use in the tropics. Son los Nidos Artificiales Sustitutos Efectivos para Estimar la Depredación de Nidos Verdaderos? Una Prueba con Aves Tropicales
doi_str_mv 10.1642/0004-8038(2005)122[0843:AABNES]2.0.CO;2
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A TEST WITH TROPICAL BIRDS</title><source>BioOne Complete</source><source>Jstor Complete Legacy</source><source>EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals</source><creator>Robinson, W. Douglas ; Styrsky, Jennifer Nesbitt ; Brawn, Jeffrey D</creator><contributor>Stouffer, P. C</contributor><creatorcontrib>Robinson, W. Douglas ; Styrsky, Jennifer Nesbitt ; Brawn, Jeffrey D ; Stouffer, P. C</creatorcontrib><description>Artificial bird nests are often used in studying birds whose nests are difficult to find, such as those of many tropical species. Yet the underlying assumption that predation on artificial nests accurately estimates predation on real nests may be invalid. We compared rates at which contents of real and artificial nests were lost to predators in a Panamanian rainforest. We attempted to make artificial nests as realistic as possible by moving real, undamaged nests to species-typical nest sites in a study area where the same species were actively breeding. Characteristics of new sites for the moved nests were statistically similar to nest sites chosen by birds. We baited nests with two quail eggs and monitored them for species-specific incubation periods. Predation on real and artificial nests was dissimilar in three of four species, revealing that predation on artificial nests correlated poorly with predation on real nests. In a fourth species, artificial and real nests were lost at similar rates. The latter result may have occurred by chance, because depredated real nests rarely showed any sign of damage; whereas depredated artificial nests were torn, which suggests that real and artificial nests attracted different predators. Our results indicate that artificial nests, even when built by the species themselves and placed in realistic situations, are poor predictors of real nest success and we caution against their use in the tropics. Son los Nidos Artificiales Sustitutos Efectivos para Estimar la Depredación de Nidos Verdaderos? 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C</contributor><creatorcontrib>Robinson, W. Douglas</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Styrsky, Jennifer Nesbitt</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Brawn, Jeffrey D</creatorcontrib><title>ARE ARTIFICIAL BIRD NESTS EFFECTIVE SURROGATES FOR ESTIMATING PREDATION ON REAL BIRD NESTS? A TEST WITH TROPICAL BIRDS</title><title>The Auk</title><description>Artificial bird nests are often used in studying birds whose nests are difficult to find, such as those of many tropical species. Yet the underlying assumption that predation on artificial nests accurately estimates predation on real nests may be invalid. We compared rates at which contents of real and artificial nests were lost to predators in a Panamanian rainforest. We attempted to make artificial nests as realistic as possible by moving real, undamaged nests to species-typical nest sites in a study area where the same species were actively breeding. Characteristics of new sites for the moved nests were statistically similar to nest sites chosen by birds. We baited nests with two quail eggs and monitored them for species-specific incubation periods. Predation on real and artificial nests was dissimilar in three of four species, revealing that predation on artificial nests correlated poorly with predation on real nests. In a fourth species, artificial and real nests were lost at similar rates. The latter result may have occurred by chance, because depredated real nests rarely showed any sign of damage; whereas depredated artificial nests were torn, which suggests that real and artificial nests attracted different predators. Our results indicate that artificial nests, even when built by the species themselves and placed in realistic situations, are poor predictors of real nest success and we caution against their use in the tropics. Son los Nidos Artificiales Sustitutos Efectivos para Estimar la Depredación de Nidos Verdaderos? 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Douglas</au><au>Styrsky, Jennifer Nesbitt</au><au>Brawn, Jeffrey D</au><au>Stouffer, P. C</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>ARE ARTIFICIAL BIRD NESTS EFFECTIVE SURROGATES FOR ESTIMATING PREDATION ON REAL BIRD NESTS? A TEST WITH TROPICAL BIRDS</atitle><jtitle>The Auk</jtitle><date>2005-07-01</date><risdate>2005</risdate><volume>122</volume><issue>3</issue><spage>843</spage><epage>852</epage><pages>843-852</pages><issn>0004-8038</issn><eissn>1938-4254</eissn><eissn>2732-4613</eissn><abstract>Artificial bird nests are often used in studying birds whose nests are difficult to find, such as those of many tropical species. Yet the underlying assumption that predation on artificial nests accurately estimates predation on real nests may be invalid. We compared rates at which contents of real and artificial nests were lost to predators in a Panamanian rainforest. We attempted to make artificial nests as realistic as possible by moving real, undamaged nests to species-typical nest sites in a study area where the same species were actively breeding. Characteristics of new sites for the moved nests were statistically similar to nest sites chosen by birds. We baited nests with two quail eggs and monitored them for species-specific incubation periods. Predation on real and artificial nests was dissimilar in three of four species, revealing that predation on artificial nests correlated poorly with predation on real nests. In a fourth species, artificial and real nests were lost at similar rates. The latter result may have occurred by chance, because depredated real nests rarely showed any sign of damage; whereas depredated artificial nests were torn, which suggests that real and artificial nests attracted different predators. Our results indicate that artificial nests, even when built by the species themselves and placed in realistic situations, are poor predictors of real nest success and we caution against their use in the tropics. Son los Nidos Artificiales Sustitutos Efectivos para Estimar la Depredación de Nidos Verdaderos? Una Prueba con Aves Tropicales</abstract><cop>Waco</cop><pub>The American Ornithologists' Union</pub><doi>10.1642/0004-8038(2005)122[0843:AABNES]2.0.CO;2</doi><tpages>10</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Animal behavior
artificial bird nests
Bird nesting
Birds
Conservation biology
daily predation rate
Ecology
Eggs
Forest ecology
Incubation
nest predation
Nests
Ornithology
Panama
Predation
Predators
Rainforests
Reproductive success
Tropical environments
tropical forest
title ARE ARTIFICIAL BIRD NESTS EFFECTIVE SURROGATES FOR ESTIMATING PREDATION ON REAL BIRD NESTS? A TEST WITH TROPICAL BIRDS
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